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#1
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"Harry Krause" wrote in message
... Another Republican trying to bankrupt us and our children... Bush's $87 billion figure is the largest emergency spending request since the opening months of World War II, according to Pat Towell, a defense fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. The emergency spending act that followed the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and the launching of the war in Afghanistan totaled $20 billion. To put it in perspective, Bush hopes to spend more in Iraq and Afghanistan than all 50 states say they need -- $78 billion -- to finance the budget shortfalls they anticipate for 2004. The request is higher than the $74 billion the Defense Department plans to spend on all new weapons purchases next year, and higher than the $29.5 billion the Education Department hopes to spend on elementary and secondary education plus the $41.3 billion the administration plans to spend to defend the homeland. With $166 billion spent or requested, Bush's war spending in 2003 and 2004 already exceeds the inflation-adjusted costs of the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, the Mexican War, the Civil War, the Spanish American War and the Persian Gulf War combined, according to a study by Yale University economist William D. Nordhaus. The Iraq war approaches the $191 billion inflation-adjusted cost of World War I |
#2
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Aren't there something like 20-million people in Iraq?
This 87 billion ought to just about do it. Pay every man, woman, and child in Iraq just over $4mm apiece to move. Anywhere. Unless my math is bad, we are proposing to spend $4mm per living Iraqi to rebuild the country. Why bother? Clear the entire country of anybody living anywhere. No problems administering the government. With a family of four Iraqi tent dwellers suddenly worth $16mm US, they ought to be able to get a VISA to live anywhere on the planet. Once we clear out every single Iraqi, their $4mm in hand, we could safely assume that anybody left in the country was probably hanging around to terrorize our oil wells, and we could deal with them accordingly. If we were to adopt this as our foreign policy, the fantasy that residents of the countries we invade would greet us with flowers, smiles, and glad tidings would most certainly come true. We'd have countries just begging to be overthrown. |
#3
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#4
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jps wrote:
"Harry Krause" wrote in message ... Another Republican trying to bankrupt us and our children... Bush's $87 billion figure is the largest emergency spending request since the opening months of World War II, according to Pat Towell, a defense fellow at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. The emergency spending act that followed the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and the launching of the war in Afghanistan totaled $20 billion. To put it in perspective, Bush hopes to spend more in Iraq and Afghanistan than all 50 states say they need -- $78 billion -- to finance the budget shortfalls they anticipate for 2004. The request is higher than the $74 billion the Defense Department plans to spend on all new weapons purchases next year, and higher than the $29.5 billion the Education Department hopes to spend on elementary and secondary education plus the $41.3 billion the administration plans to spend to defend the homeland. With $166 billion spent or requested, Bush's war spending in 2003 and 2004 already exceeds the inflation-adjusted costs of the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, the Mexican War, the Civil War, the Spanish American War and the Persian Gulf War combined, according to a study by Yale University economist William D. Nordhaus. The Iraq war approaches the $191 billion inflation-adjusted cost of World War I Yep, you're right. This dang war is just too expensive. We should just stop right now. Pull out, tuck our tails between our legs and return home. We should then send a broadcast out to all terrorists to please not attack us, since not only do we not have the resolve to fight back, we also don't have the money..... Can you say "open season"? sure you can....... Dave |
#5
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![]() "Dave Hall" wrote in message ... jps wrote: With $166 billion spent or requested, Bush's war spending in 2003 and 2004 already exceeds the inflation-adjusted costs of the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, the Mexican War, the Civil War, the Spanish American War and the Persian Gulf War combined, according to a study by Yale University economist William D. Nordhaus. The Iraq war approaches the $191 billion inflation-adjusted cost of World War I Yep, you're right. This dang war is just too expensive. We should just stop right now. Pull out, tuck our tails between our legs and return home. We should then send a broadcast out to all terrorists to please not attack us, since not only do we not have the resolve to fight back, we also don't have the money..... Can you say "open season"? sure you can....... Dave Should've had better information going in. We were in a rush to avoid the hot weather. Bad estimates on WMDs, bad estimates of oil revenues, bad estimates of Iraq infrastructure -- even though we had people on the ground in Iraq for months prior to invasion. This administration are pie in the sky enthusiasts. They should be restricted to running paint ball wars. Then they could clean up with a little soap and water instead of putting our country in deep **** and in hawk up to our ears. Time for another tax cut Dave? |
#6
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"jps" wrote in message
... This administration are pie in the sky enthusiasts. They should be restricted to running paint ball wars. Remember, this is the president who, when asked during his campaign what his pastimes were, told reporters he spent a couple of hours a day playing video games. And, when asked about his reading habits, said he read the newspapers, but not much else. Lights on, nobody home. |
#7
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jps wrote:
"Dave Hall" wrote in message ... jps wrote: With $166 billion spent or requested, Bush's war spending in 2003 and 2004 already exceeds the inflation-adjusted costs of the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, the Mexican War, the Civil War, the Spanish American War and the Persian Gulf War combined, according to a study by Yale University economist William D. Nordhaus. The Iraq war approaches the $191 billion inflation-adjusted cost of World War I Yep, you're right. This dang war is just too expensive. We should just stop right now. Pull out, tuck our tails between our legs and return home. We should then send a broadcast out to all terrorists to please not attack us, since not only do we not have the resolve to fight back, we also don't have the money..... Can you say "open season"? sure you can....... Dave Should've had better information going in. We were in a rush to avoid the hot weather. That's a given. They did underestimate the resolve of terrorists operating in the shadows. But ok, so sue me. What do you expect? No plan is perfect. Bad estimates on WMDs, That remains to be seen. It's still a BIG desert out there. Syria's even bigger. bad estimates of oil revenues, bad estimates of Iraq infrastructure -- even though we had people on the ground in Iraq for months prior to invasion. None of which took into account the acts of sabotage which are still going on. Look, it seems that you guys are holding Bush to a super-human ability to see all, and know all. The fact is that no matter who is at the helm, they rely on information provided to them by people trained to do their jobs. I'm not going to go into the problems which resulted from the decimation of the intelligence communities at the hands of democrats, who would rather give the money to slackers, than invest in the means to protect our country, as this is water over the dam now. But you can't fully fault the Bush administration, without giving some consideration to who was feeding his people the intel. This administration are pie in the sky enthusiasts. They should be restricted to running paint ball wars. Slinging rocks, when you don't know the full story is being irresponsible. Slinging rocks and finding fault while not offering workable alternatives is equally irresponsible. Any moron can blame Bush for everything from the Iraq war, to the economy, to the spreading of AIDS in Africa. But unless you can elaborate the steps in which you can realistically correct these problems, then you have no business weighing in on the situation. As a manager I once knew said, "we don't need more problems, we need solutions". Then they could clean up with a little soap and water instead of putting our country in deep **** and in hawk up to our ears. Time for another tax cut Dave? Hey, let's see. I've got a grand total of $1000 dollars back in lump sum payments. I'm also paying about $800 a year less in federal taxes. That means that I have more money than I had before. I'm not about to complain. Better in my pocket, than the government's. Dave |
#8
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Dave Hall wrote:
Hey, let's see. I've got a grand total of $1000 dollars back in lump sum payments. I'm also paying about $800 a year less in federal taxes. That means that I have more money than I had before. I'm not about to complain. Better in my pocket, than the government's. Dave Pretty soon, Dave, you'll be up to the poverty level. -- * * * email sent to will *never* get to me. |
#9
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![]() "Dave Hall" wrote in message ... jps wrote: "Dave Hall" wrote in message ... jps wrote: With $166 billion spent or requested, Bush's war spending in 2003 and 2004 already exceeds the inflation-adjusted costs of the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, the Mexican War, the Civil War, the Spanish American War and the Persian Gulf War combined, according to a study by Yale University economist William D. Nordhaus. The Iraq war approaches the $191 billion inflation-adjusted cost of World War I Yep, you're right. This dang war is just too expensive. We should just stop right now. Pull out, tuck our tails between our legs and return home. We should then send a broadcast out to all terrorists to please not attack us, since not only do we not have the resolve to fight back, we also don't have the money..... Can you say "open season"? sure you can....... Dave Should've had better information going in. We were in a rush to avoid the hot weather. That's a given. They did underestimate the resolve of terrorists operating in the shadows. But ok, so sue me. What do you expect? No plan is perfect. Bad estimates on WMDs, That remains to be seen. It's still a BIG desert out there. Syria's even bigger. bad estimates of oil revenues, bad estimates of Iraq infrastructure -- even though we had people on the ground in Iraq for months prior to invasion. None of which took into account the acts of sabotage which are still going on. Look, it seems that you guys are holding Bush to a super-human ability to see all, and know all. The fact is that no matter who is at the helm, they rely on information provided to them by people trained to do their jobs. I'm not going to go into the problems which resulted from the decimation of the intelligence communities at the hands of democrats, who would rather give the money to slackers, than invest in the means to protect our country, as this is water over the dam now. But you can't fully fault the Bush administration, without giving some consideration to who was feeding his people the intel. This administration are pie in the sky enthusiasts. They should be restricted to running paint ball wars. Slinging rocks, when you don't know the full story is being irresponsible. Slinging rocks and finding fault while not offering workable alternatives is equally irresponsible. Any moron can blame Bush for everything from the Iraq war, to the economy, to the spreading of AIDS in Africa. But unless you can elaborate the steps in which you can realistically correct these problems, then you have no business weighing in on the situation. As a manager I once knew said, "we don't need more problems, we need solutions". While some seem suprised that things would turn out the way they did, I have been consitantly predicting that things would happen pretty much the way they did. Before the war started, while it was still possible to manage costs, I was saying that we would have to pay large costs if we marched into a needless war. I listed financal costs, requirements for long term comitments, loss of life, failure of the Iraqis to embrace our vision for them, and possible myhem while our forces are engaged. Fortunately, the last item has not come to pass yet, but it is a very real possibility. All this is a matter of public record: http://www.google.com/groups?q=group...m=325&filter=0 http://www.google.com/groups?q=group...242H6.1262%40s ccrnsc04&rnum=342&filter=0 http://www.google.com/groups?q=group...m=341&filter=0 Much of the current problems had been demonstrated in Vietnam. If you take the time to look for the parralells and lessons of history it is very easy to predict a protracted resistance. http://www.google.com/groups?q=group...m=333&filter=0 After the war started, it was easy to see you it would go and the problems that seem to have cought the administration by suprize. The costs were already clear to anybody willing to do the math. Knowegable generals were already predicting the need for large number of forces to pacify the population. The best the right could come up with was to claim were were all wrong, and that the leadership had some sort of special knowlge not available to the general population. http://www.google.com/groups?q=group...m=304&filter=0 http://www.google.com/groups?q=group...m=302&filter=0 I told yuou so! snip Time for another tax cut Dave? Hey, let's see. I've got a grand total of $1000 dollars back in lump sum payments. I'm also paying about $800 a year less in federal taxes. That means that I have more money than I had before. I'm not about to complain. Better in my pocket, than the government's. So your common sense can be bought for a few peices of silver; why am I not suprized? Mark Browne |
#10
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Sorry for the spelling on the prior post, I hit send instead of spell check.
"Dave Hall" wrote in message ... jps wrote: "Dave Hall" wrote in message ... jps wrote: With $166 billion spent or requested, Bush's war spending in 2003 and 2004 already exceeds the inflation-adjusted costs of the Revolutionary War, the War of 1812, the Mexican War, the Civil War, the Spanish American War and the Persian Gulf War combined, according to a study by Yale University economist William D. Nordhaus. The Iraq war approaches the $191 billion inflation-adjusted cost of World War I Yep, you're right. This dang war is just too expensive. We should just stop right now. Pull out, tuck our tails between our legs and return home. We should then send a broadcast out to all terrorists to please not attack us, since not only do we not have the resolve to fight back, we also don't have the money..... Can you say "open season"? sure you can....... Dave Should've had better information going in. We were in a rush to avoid the hot weather. That's a given. They did underestimate the resolve of terrorists operating in the shadows. But ok, so sue me. What do you expect? No plan is perfect. Bad estimates on WMDs, That remains to be seen. It's still a BIG desert out there. Syria's even bigger. bad estimates of oil revenues, bad estimates of Iraq infrastructure -- even though we had people on the ground in Iraq for months prior to invasion. None of which took into account the acts of sabotage which are still going on. Look, it seems that you guys are holding Bush to a super-human ability to see all, and know all. The fact is that no matter who is at the helm, they rely on information provided to them by people trained to do their jobs. I'm not going to go into the problems which resulted from the decimation of the intelligence communities at the hands of democrats, who would rather give the money to slackers, than invest in the means to protect our country, as this is water over the dam now. But you can't fully fault the Bush administration, without giving some consideration to who was feeding his people the intel. This administration are pie in the sky enthusiasts. They should be restricted to running paint ball wars. Slinging rocks, when you don't know the full story is being irresponsible. Slinging rocks and finding fault while not offering workable alternatives is equally irresponsible. Any moron can blame Bush for everything from the Iraq war, to the economy, to the spreading of AIDS in Africa. But unless you can elaborate the steps in which you can realistically correct these problems, then you have no business weighing in on the situation. As a manager I once knew said, "we don't need more problems, we need solutions". While some seem surprised that things would turn out the way they did, I have been consistently predicting that things would happen pretty much the way they did. Before the war started, while it was still possible to manage costs, I was saying that we would have to pay large costs if we marched into a needless war. I listed financial costs, requirements for long term commitments, loss of life, failure of the Iraqis to embrace our vision for them, and possible mayhem while our forces are engaged. Fortunately, the last item has not come to pass yet, but it is still a very real possibility. All this is a matter of public record: http://www.google.com/groups?q=group...m=325&filter=0 http://www.google.com/groups?q=group...m=342&filter=0 http://www.google.com/groups?q=group...m=341&filter=0 Much of the current problems had been demonstrated in Vietnam. If you take the time to look for the parallels and lessons of history it is very easy to predict a protracted resistance. http://www.google.com/groups?q=group...m=333&filter=0 After the war started, it was easy to see how it would go and the problems that seem to have caught the administration by surprise. The costs were already clear to anybody willing to do the math. Knowledgeable generals were already predicting the need for large number of forces to pacify the population. The best the right could come up with was to claim that we were all wrong, and that the leadership had some sort of special knowledge not available to the general population. Now we know more about this "special intelligence" - wishful thinking and willful ignorance of the facts. http://www.google.com/groups?q=group...m=304&filter=0 http://www.google.com/groups?q=group...m=302&filter=0 I told you so! snip Time for another tax cut Dave? Hey, let's see. I've got a grand total of $1000 dollars back in lump sum payments. I'm also paying about $800 a year less in federal taxes. That means that I have more money than I had before. I'm not about to complain. Better in my pocket, than the government's. So your common sense can be bought for a few pieces of silver; why am I not surprised? Mark Browne |
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